Home Artists Cathryn Jenkins

Kooness

Cathryn Jenkins


Canada

52 Works exhibited on Kooness

Represented by

Works by Cathryn Jenkins

Scratch, (36/50)

Sculpture , Bronze

12.7 x 12.7 x 10.16cm

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Looking Up To You, (36/50)

Sculpture , Bronze

12.7 x 12.7 x 7.62cm

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Waggy Tail Club, (36/50)

Sculpture , Bronze

10.16 x 15.24 x 7.62cm

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I Hear Momma Coming, (36/50)

Sculpture , Bronze

12.7 x 10.16 x 10.16cm

Contact for price

Scratch, (38/50)

Sculpture , Bronze

12.7 x 12.7 x 10.16cm

Contact for price

Looking Up to You, (38/50)

Sculpture , Bronze

12.7 x 12.7 x 7.62cm

Contact for price

Waggy Tail Club, (38/50)

Sculpture , Bronze

10.16 x 15.24 x 7.62cm

Contact for price

I Hear Momma Coming, (38/50)

Sculpture , Bronze

12.7 x 10.16 x 10.16cm

Contact for price

Curious Cub, (8/8)

Sculpture , Bronze

25.4 x 19.05 x 24.13cm

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I Hear Momma Coming, (33/50)

Sculpture , Bronze

12.7 x 10.16 x 10.16cm

Contact for price

"I am honoured to be represented by Mountain Galleries. Together we have enjoyed a love of art, and have shared this passion with art collectors for more than 25 years. It has been a fantastic relationship over the years, and I look forward to our continued partnership in the placement of sculpture in the homes of art lovers around the world." As the daughter of prominent Canadian sculptor, Fran Jenkins, Cathryn spent many hours in her mother’s studio learning about the qualities of different stone and the relationship between artist and medium while gaining an understanding of line, form and the joy of sculpture.Her own stylized representational forms, influenced by her mother as well as Inuit and American sculptors, combine the pleasure of touch and the appeal of strong line. The skillful union of these key elements, consistently present in all of Cathryn’s work, allows the creation of unmatched, timeless works of art.  The stone selected for Cathryn’s works is hand quarried in British Columbia. Marble, alabaster, serpentine and soapstone have individual qualities unveiled by hammer and chisel, diamond blades, rasps, files and the artist’s eye to reveal flowing agility, powerful line and lustrous natural surface. The work is to be touched.  Its tactile appeal becomes a part of the living area for which it is created.  Her sculpture becomes an integral part of it’s space; a familiar presence to which an understanding and relationship soon develops. Cathryn’s series of sought after wildlife sculptures continue to hold places of pride among many private and corporate collections. Serpentine Stone A deposit of this very unusual stone in central British Columbia provides an excellent medium for sculpting. Millions of years ago deep in the earth, a mass of peridotite metamorphasized into black and blue-grey serpentine with a very high content of iron-carbonate.  Hot fluids invaded the iron-carbonate serpentine partially altering it to a golden brown iron rich marble - anchorite with chlorite and talc as the main accessory minerals. Some of the serpentine was left unchanged. All of this resulted in stone of black, blue-grey, gold and splashes of green; sometimes all in the same piece.